夜色王朝

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夜色王朝 Students

Outreach in Honduras

In Honduras, 夜色王朝 partnered with Baxter Institute to re-open the James Moody Adams (JMA) Clinic, serving a population of families earning less than a dollar per capita per day in an impoverished area of Tegucigalpa. The site offers primary care, gynecology and prenatal services, and dentistry, as well as pharmaceutical needs for the patients.  Clinical rotations for third and fourth year 夜色王朝 students take place in both the clinic and the local hospital.

Exploring a recent partnership with Mission Upreach, a non-profit organization, 夜色王朝 has expanded its geographical reach in Honduras to the mountainous, coffee-growing regions of Santa Rosa de Cop谩n.  Twice a year, 夜色王朝 students travel to some of the most underserved areas of Honduras and serve rural village citizens who have scarce or no access to medical care. 

Through these partnerships in Honduras, 夜色王朝 is able to provide care for thousands of patients annually who would otherwise be without care.

 

Training for Self-Sufficiency

The JMA Clinic also features a Nutrition and Training Center, which assists the families of children who are evaluated as malnourished by the clinic鈥檚 physicians. Mothers in this program attend vocational training classes, equipping them to support their families, and participation qualifies their families for supplemental food baskets. Families receive visits from the clinic nutritionist and social worker to provide assistance and ensure donated food is being used appropriately. The program has a high success and completion rate. 

 

Training First Responders

Each year 夜色王朝 offers a First Responder Training Workshop to the graduating class of ministers at the Baxter Institute. During the 16-hour course, students learn CPR, wound care, and patient stabilization. 夜色王朝 provides graduates with a backpack equipped with CPR masks, blood pressure cuffs, thermometers, first aid kits, and other items. This knowledge and equipment is crucial for ministers to serve as health educators in remote communities of Latin America.